Yea it would be definitely, but it some instances a bear is charging at you so fast moving in between trees , it’s hard to get a clear and good shot off unless you really know what your doing , otherwise bear spray or mace does the job just fine
Okay Canadian here. Moose are roaming east to west and most of your " moose" videos were elk . First one was a cow and calf moose ( dark brown) other two shots were elk. Now on to the cougar, puma, mountain lion panther coast to coast and as far south as Argentina but mainly on west coast. And they are the second biggest cat in the western hemisphere not the world. Lions are second behind Tigers in the world. Brown bears are west coast but are being sighted near the boarder of northern Ontario and Manitoba. Black bear coast to coast. Wolves coast to coast. Now I don't know if Americans know this but Canadians mainly inhabit the southern section of our country a stone throw from our American brothers from the south. And we seem to have killed off and pushed these animals leaving them the vast wilderness north of where the majority of us live and farm.
@@DavidAllenProductions Right on man. I live in Ontario Canada and hunt and fish and I'm obsessed with the Canadian wildlife. Mainly concerned with the sightings of black bear and cougar coming back to southern and central Ontario. You got many things right about our wildlife just wanted to set the record straight on a couple things. 👍
my wife's aunt was killed by a moose. driving in new brunswick at night and slammed right into a large male. they're basically invisible if youre not using high beams. the moose was so big it crushed the top half of her car. she was extracted from the wreckage in pieces. closed casket funeral.
0:50 these are not moose, lol. Only the first picture was a moose & baby. The moose is very dangerous to humans. If they run into you they will want to attack you, and they sometimes fine their way into towns etc. runningn when you encounter one will cause it to chase after you and attack you in certain circumstances, so know your stuff to protect yourself. 1:21 you can go your whole life in the mountain lions habitat, and never see one. 1:54 we call them brown bears Grizzly bears. One should not enter the habitat of a grizzly bear unless they are well educated about the facts pertaining to doing so. Polar bears are getting more and more aggressive towards humans because they are loosing their ancestral icy hunting habitat, and are visiting human habitat more frequently and in numbers. 3:15 wolves tend to stay well away from humans.
Love that you cover states no one else does
I’m glad you enjoy the content. Thanks for watching
At least we burnt the white house down
Those were elk, not moose.
You’re right. This was old when I was first starting the channel. Now I can tell the difference quite easily. I might remake this video one day
I just released most dangerous animals in Arizona 15 minutes ago. Tell me what you think
Thanks. I would love to ride a moose but I don’t think that’s going to happen.
@@martinphilip8998😅😂
0:57 Tiger and Lion are heavier than Jaguar or Cougar. I think you mean second heaviest in the Americas.
I am Canadian and we are the dangerous animals 😎
They are not just in western Canada. They are right across the country. Including Newfoundland
I would've thought a shotgun would be more effective than repellent spray 🤔
Yea it would be definitely, but it some instances a bear is charging at you so fast moving in between trees , it’s hard to get a clear and good shot off unless you really know what your doing , otherwise bear spray or mace does the job just fine
Okay Canadian here.
Moose are roaming east to west and most of your " moose" videos were elk . First one was a cow and calf moose ( dark brown) other two shots were elk. Now on to the cougar, puma, mountain lion panther coast to coast and as far south as Argentina but mainly on west coast. And they are the second biggest cat in the western hemisphere not the world. Lions are second behind Tigers in the world. Brown bears are west coast but are being sighted near the boarder of northern Ontario and Manitoba. Black bear coast to coast. Wolves coast to coast. Now I don't know if Americans know this but Canadians mainly inhabit the southern section of our country a stone throw from our American brothers from the south. And we seem to have killed off and pushed these animals leaving them the vast wilderness north of where the majority of us live and farm.
This was one of my first videos brother. My new videos don’t represent this
@@DavidAllenProductions Right on man. I live in Ontario Canada and hunt and fish and I'm obsessed with the Canadian wildlife. Mainly concerned with the sightings of black bear and cougar coming back to southern and central Ontario. You got many things right about our wildlife just wanted to set the record straight on a couple things. 👍
my wife's aunt was killed by a moose. driving in new brunswick at night and slammed right into a large male. they're basically invisible if youre not using high beams. the moose was so big it crushed the top half of her car. she was extracted from the wreckage in pieces. closed casket funeral.
0:50 these are not moose, lol. Only the first picture was a moose & baby. The moose is very dangerous to humans. If they run into you they will want to attack you, and they sometimes fine their way into towns etc. runningn when you encounter one will cause it to chase after you and attack you in certain circumstances, so know your stuff to protect yourself.
1:21 you can go your whole life in the mountain lions habitat, and never see one.
1:54 we call them brown bears Grizzly bears. One should not enter the habitat of a grizzly bear unless they are well educated about the facts pertaining to doing so. Polar bears are getting more and more aggressive towards humans because they are loosing their ancestral icy hunting habitat, and are visiting human habitat more frequently and in numbers.
3:15 wolves tend to stay well away from humans.
A 6 min video about wolves pumas and bears??